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The Role Of The Cold War In Indira Gandhi’s Emergency

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The Role Of The Cold War In Indira Gandhi’s Emergency

~By Saeed Naqvi

Indira Gandhi declared the emergency in 1975, plonk in the middle of the most intense phase of the cold war. Détente was going so badly for the Americans that stand up comedians in Washington were comparing it to a wife swapping party “from where you return alone.”

After the Vietnam debacle, Washington was going to exert every muscle not to allow Moscow to build upon the strategic asset it had created for itself in New Delhi during the 1971 Bangladesh war.

In fact, the Congress split of 1969 was itself an advantage for Moscow. Mrs. Gandhi had discarded the conservative, pro capital big wigs, more comfortable with Congress stalwarts like Morarji Desai whom she had defeated in the Parliamentary party contest to become Prime Minister in 1966.

Not only was a former card carrying communist (from Eton and Oxford too), Mohan Kumaramangalam part author of the split, he had worked out an arrangement with the General Secretary of the CPI, S.A. Dange described as a policy of “Unite and Struggle”. We shall, said Dange, unite with the Congress’s progressive policies but “struggle” against its “anti people” deviations.

This was a pronounced leftward lurch and it was going to be resisted by a coalition of the Right, both internal and external. Indeed, as early as 1967, within a year of her coming to power, Mrs. Gandhi was given notice: she lost elections in eight states to parties of the opposition. This groundswell would obviously suit the purposes of the Congress old guard discarded by Mrs. Gandhi.

The most succinct observation on Mrs. Gandhi’s ideological leanings came from the correspondent of the Times London, Peter Hazelhurst: “She is a little to the Left of self interest.”

The Role Of The Cold War In Indira Gandhi’s Emergency

Her ideological inconsistency becomes apparent if one reverts to her earliest days in 1959 as President of the Congress. She dismissed the world’s first communist government which had come to power through the ballot box in Kerala. That she took American help to unsettle Kerala to justify the state government’s dismissal was revealed by US ambassador, Ellsworth Bunker in an oral interview kept in the Columbia University archives. Whatever doubts there might have been about the Bunker revelations, were cleared later by Ambassador Daniel Patrick Moynihan in his memoirs.

During her Prime Ministership in 1976, the Congress party raised a storm against the US having installed a nuclear device on Nanda Devi peak to spy on China. The controversy had many twists. A joint CIA and Intelligence Bureau effort to install the device in 1965 (Lal Bahadur Shastri was Prime Minister then) had failed because of bad weather. Worse, two plutonium laden capsules had been lost. According to the Intelligence estimates the plutonium was enough for half a Hiroshima bomb.

Read More: Indira Gandhi changed democracy into dictatorship: Arun Jaitley

In the course of an interview, Chester Bowles, US ambassador during Indira Gandhi’s first innings, took my breath away. He couldn’t understand Congress protest. “After all Indira had asked me to complete in 1966 the project which had been aborted in 1965.”

Well, this is how the Congress’s attitude towards the super powers varied from time to time. But for the West the spectacle of Mrs. Gandhi and Dange in a warm embrace was alarming because of the context. The West had taken a series of knocks – Vietnam, Angola, Mozambique, Ethiopia, Nicaragua were all communist. Additionally Communist leaders Enrico Berlinguer, Georges Marchais, Santiago Carrillo in Italy, France and Spain respectively were a headache for the West. Given this state of play, India was too priceless a trophy to be easily lost to Moscow’s sphere of influence.

The obstacle in the way of a counteroffensive was Mrs. Gandhi’s personality. She had evolved into a charismatic and, therefore, invincible leader. Proprietor of the Indian Express, Ramnath Goenka and Nanaji Deshmukh, fell into deep thought.

The Indian mind reveres renunciation. It occurred to the head hunters that once a top ranking Socialist leader, Jayaprakash Narayan had renounced political power. He was keeping himself busy with Gandhiji’s ashrams and such unlikely causes as Acharya Vinoba Bhave’s Bhoodan or Land Gift movement. JP agreed to lead the movement provided it remained peaceful.

The Role Of The Cold War In Indira Gandhi’s Emergency

The youth were in agitation across the globe against the excesses of the Vietnam War – Grosvenor Square, London, barricades in Paris, police shooting down of students at the Kent state university in Ohio, US. Soon thereafter the Navnirman Andolan, youth agitation in Gujarat erupted on a seemingly flimsy issue of hostel fees. After visiting Gujarat, JP was prevailed upon to launch a similar movement against corruption and bad governance in Bihar. It was a tepid agenda livened up only by the media dedicated to the task of keeping up the pressure on New Delhi, boosting notions of a “total revolution” one day, asking police and the bureaucracy not to obey “bad” orders another, and so on. The immediate target of the “movement” was a hapless Chief Minister, Abdul Ghafoor, quite bewildered by his own eminence. Why was he in the eye of a storm? He had sunken cheeks and a drooping frame, draped in a much worn Sherwani. By way of hospitality for visiting scribes, he would fetch a bottle of old smuggler Scotch whisky from his wardrobe full of smudged clothes which were clearly waiting for laundry. He was a simple man, not a plausible enough crook to invite a national movement for his ouster.

JP, who had invited me to stay in his house in Patna’s Kadam Kuan, listened to my stories even about the CM with a kindly smile. He was a trusting man and totally non judgemental about the wide range of political interests who had clambered onto his movement.

The movement was carried mostly by RSS cadres, with a sprinkling of socialists, Gandhians and Congress (O), mostly those who had been shown the door by Mrs. Gandhi in 1969. This exactly was the rough outline of the group which morphed into a coalition in the course of the movement. The coalition came to power in 1977 as the Janata Party.

Supposing the Allahabad High Court had not disqualified Mrs. Gandhi, how would events have shaped? If Sanjay Gandhi, Siddhartha Shankar Ray, Muhammad Yunus and others had not forced her hand on the Emergency, how would the Mrs. Gandhi-JP standoff have concluded?

2024 Lok Sabha Elections

Around 40% voter turnout till 1pm, West Bengal records highest voter turnout of 49.27%

States such as Assam, Chhattisgarh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh as well as Daman & Diu and Dadra & Nagar Haveli also saw an increase in the voting trends. While Gujarat recorded an overall voter turnout of 37.83 %, Uttar Pradesh recorded a voter turnout of 38.12 %.

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An overall voter turnout of around 40% was recorded as of 1 pm on Tuesday in the 3rd phase of the ongoing Lok Sabha elections. The highest overall voter turnout was recorded in West Bengal at 49.27% as of 1 pm which was followed closely by Goa with 49.04% voter turnout so far.

States such as Assam, Chhattisgarh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh as well as Daman & Diu and Dadra & Nagar Haveli also saw an increase in the voting trends. While Gujarat recorded an overall voter turnout of 37.83 %, Uttar Pradesh recorded a voter turnout of 38.12 %. Maharashtra continued to log the lowest voter turnout till 1 pm. The state, which has the second highest number of Lok Sabha seats after Uttar Pradesh, saw an overall voter turnout of less than 32% till 1 pm.

In Uttar Pradesh, Firozabad 40.06 %,Sambhal recorded 42.97 % voter turnout, Etah 38.87 %, Fatehpur Sikri 39.09 %, Hathras 37.73 %, Agra witnessed 36.89 % voting, Mainpuri 38.82 %, Budaun 34.97%, and Bareilly 34.93 %, Aonla recorded 36.95 % voting.

In Bihar about 36.69 % voter turnout was recorded across five Lok Sabha seats. Supaul recorded the highest voter turnout at 38.58 %, followed by Araria (37.09 %), Khagaria (36.02 %), Madhepura (36.84 %) and Jhanjharpur (34.94%) till 1 pm. Out of the 14 Lok Sabha seats that went to polls in Karnataka, Chikkodi recorded the highest voter turnout at 45.69 %, followed by Shimoga at 44.98 %. Gulbarga recorded the least voter turnout at 37.48 %.

In Maharashtra, Hatkanangle 36.17%, Kolhapur registered 38.42% voter turnout, Satara 32.78 %, Ratnagiri-Sindhudurg 33.91%, Raigad 31.34 %, Latur 32.71 %, Sangli 29.65 %, Osmanabad 30.54 %, Baramati 27.55 % Solapur 29.32 % and Madha 26.61%.

In Assam, Dhubri recorded the highest voter turnout of 47.73%, followed by Barpeta at 46.83%. While Kokrajhar recorded a voter turnout of 46.43 %, Guwahati had a polling percentage of 42.13%.

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2024 Lok Sabha Elections

Former Congress leader Radhika Khera joins BJP days after quitting over harassment

Radhika Khera, who was an All India Congress Committee (AICC) spokesperson, today joined BJP, after resigning from the Congress on Sunday,

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Former Rajasthan Congress leader Radhika Khera today joined the BJP. She had left the grand old party a few days earlier after accusing senior leaders of harassment.

All India Congress Committee (AICC) spokesperson Khera announced her resignation from the Congress on Sunday, citing an alleged plot against her. She added that she felt punished for going to the Ayodhya Ram Mandir.

Speaking to the media on Monday, Khera claimed that she had been mistreated, locked in a room, and harassed by Chhattisgarh Congress party leaders. She said that although she brought up the matter with the party officials, nothing came of it.

Khera, who had recently joined the BJP, praised the saffron party for their support and charged the Congress of being anti-Hindu.

After joining the BJP, Khera said, she wouldn’t be able to be here if she hadn’t received protection from the pm Modi-led BJP government. The manner in which I was misbehaved with on the land of Kaushalya Mata for being a devotee of Ram, for having darshan of Ram Lalla, she was mistreated, Khera said. The Congress of today is anti-Ram and anti-Hindu, it is not the Congress of Mahatma Gandhi, the she added.

Radhika Khera said in her resignation letter to Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge that she was being criticised by other members of the party for her inability to control her desire to visit the Ram Temple and see the idol of Ram Lalla.

Before that, a video of Khera complaining about being disrespected had gone viral. She was clearly unhappy. She is heard accusing an unidentified person, saying that no one in the party is respected, particularly women who are elected to office.

She claimed, the chairperson of the Chhattisgarh Congress unit’s communication wing, Sushil Anand, and a few other people, verbally harassed her using words that she never thought existed during an incident on April 30, which she later disclosed details of. It is said that the men allgedly locked her in a room for a minute while a couple of other people stood outise the room to keep an eye on her in case she tried to run away.

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2024 Lok Sabha Elections

PM Modi addresses rally in Khargone, urges people to choose between vote jihad or the establishment of Ram Rajya

PM Modi stressed that India is at a crucial moment in history and urged people to choose between vote jihad or the establishment of Ram Rajya

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As the 3rd phase of the 7-phase 18th Lok Sabha elections began on Tuesday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi targeted the INDIA Alliance and claimed that Opposition parties are contesting elections to save their dynasty and that their alliance was not at all bothered about the welfare of the people. PM Modi was addressing a rally in Khargone where he claimed that the BJP government has given Madhya Pradesh a new and prestigious identity by rectifying the shortcomings left behind by the Congress.

PM Modi stressed that India is at a crucial moment in history and urged people to choose between vote jihad or the establishment of Ram Rajya. The distinction came during the Prime Minister’s continuing attack against the Congress and other Opposition parties over their alleged intent to appease their Muslim vote bank.

He said the opposition parties are contesting elections to save their inheritance and hand over their party to their children. They do not care about the happiness of the people. He further added that the INDIA alliance is not bothered about the fate of the masses.

PM Modi took a dig at the opposition and said there is a saying that applies to INDI people: Apna kaam banta, bhaar me jaye janta (do your work and let the people go to hell). Prime Minister Modi said that the votes of the people helped 250 million Indians to come out of poverty, and he believed India is progressing because of collective effort by everyone.

He further added that 1 vote of theirs has made India the 5th largest economy and has increased India’s global influence, helped in removal of Article 370 after 70 years, made an Adivasi daughter the President of india and given reservation to women, sent the corrupt people to jail and the guarantee of free ration and treatment.

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